| Literature DB >> 35160063 |
Simone Di Cola1, Silvia Nardelli1, Lorenzo Ridola1, Stefania Gioia1, Oliviero Riggio1, Manuela Merli1.
Abstract
In the last years the link between the presence of muscular alterations and hepatic encephalopathy (HE), both minimal and overt, has been deeply studied. The pathophysiological background supporting the relationship between muscle depletion, and HE is characterized by an imbalance between the capacity of muscle in ammonia metabolism and trafficking and the inability of the liver in removing ammonia through urea synthesis due to liver failure and/or the presence of porto-systemic shunts. This review will focus on the clinical burden, the physio pathological mechanisms understanding the liver muscle axis and principles of management of muscular alterations in cirrhosis.Entities:
Keywords: cirrhosis; hepatic encephalopathy; myosteatosis; sarcopenia
Year: 2022 PMID: 35160063 PMCID: PMC8836353 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11030611
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Studies evaluating the relationship between muscle alterations and hepatic encephalopathy in cirrhosis.
| First Author (Year) | Number of Patients | Methods to Identify Sarcopenia and/or Myosteatosis | Prevalence of Sarcopenia and/or Myosteatosis | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Merli et al. (2013) [ | 300 hospitalized cirrhotics | Anthropometric measurements (MAMC) and handgrip strenght (HGS) | 48% | Overt HE in 30% with sarcopenia vs. 15% without sarcopenia ( |
| Hanai et al. (2017) [ | 120 cirrhotics | Bio-impedance Analysis (BIA), handgrip strenght | 27% | Sarcopenia and serum branched-chain amino acids levels were associated with MHE in the multivariate analysis ( |
| Miwa et al. (2021) [ | 270 cirrhotics | Handgrip strength | 38% | Multivariate analysis showed that reduced HGS was associated with a higher prevalence of CHE and higher risk for developing OHE |
| Nardelli et al. (2017) [ | 46 cirrhotics submitted to TIPS | CT scan to evaluate sarcopenia with Skeletal Muscle Index (SMI) | 57% | Twenty-one patients (46%) developed overt HE after TIPS placement; all of these patients were sarcopenic. At multivariate analysis, only MELD score ( |
| Kalaitzakis et al. (2007) [ | 128 cirrhotic patients | BMI, weight loss, MAMC and triceps skinfold | 40% | HE in 46% with malnutrition vs. 27% without malnutrition ( |
| Huisman et al. (2011) [ | 84 cirrhotic patients | Handgrip strength | 67% | Increased complications in cirrhotic patients with lower muscle function, including HE (18% vs. 48%, |
| Nardelli et al. (2019) [ | 64 cirrhotic patients | CT scan to evaluate sarcopenia and myosteatosis | Sarcopenia 58% | Both myosteatosis and sarcopenia were more frequent in patients who developed overt HE. On multivariate analysis, only sarcopenia ( |
| Bhanji et al. (2018) [ | 675 cirrhotic patients | CT scan to evaluate sarcopenia and myosteatosis | Sarcopenia 36% | Both myosteatosis (70 vs. 45%, |
Studies evaluating the different interventions tried for improving sarcopenia in cirrhosis.
| First Author | Number of | Type of Treatment and | Method to Explore | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Muto et al. | 646 with | BCAA orally (12 g/day) | albumin | The incidence of death and event free |
| Lattanzi et al. | 24 cirrhotics | HMB orally 3 gr/die vs. | anthropometry, | Improving in muscle performance |
| Roman et al. | 23 cirrhotics | 14 patients randomized | Anthropometry, | The exercise group shows a decrease in |
| Gioia et al. | 27 cirrhotic | TIPS placement | Skeletal muscle | SMI significantly improved after TIPS |
| Deng et al. | 580 cirrhotic | Testosterone | Various | Testosterone supplementation |